Step 1: Track the three folds.
1) The shoulder fold (marked near the collar) sends the top chevrons backward, so their peaks shift slightly downward in the visible stack.
2) The sleeve folds bring the side zigzags behind the central panel, so the front view shows a tighter, more vertical chevron field.
3) The bottom fold moves the lower band upward behind the stack, shortening the visible “V” sequence from below.
Step 2: Apply the final “turn around.”
Turning the folded shirt around flips the front/back exposure but does not mirror the chevron directions; instead, you see the backmost panel whose zigzags appear slightly higher and closer together.
Step 3: Compare with options.
- (A) and (C) show spacing/orientation inconsistent with the backward folds (too much lower zigzag visible).
- (D) keeps a broad central flare that wouldn’t remain after sleeves are folded back.
- (B) shows compressed, vertically aligned chevrons with the top band slightly lowered—exactly what the sequence plus “turn around” produces.
Final Answer:
\[
\boxed{\text{B}}
\]